scholarly journals Estimating rainfall time series and model parameter distributions using model data reduction and inversion techniques

2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (8) ◽  
pp. 6407-6424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashley J. Wright ◽  
Jeffrey P. Walker ◽  
Valentijn R. N. Pauwels
Atmosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 602
Author(s):  
Luisa Martínez-Acosta ◽  
Juan Pablo Medrano-Barboza ◽  
Álvaro López-Ramos ◽  
John Freddy Remolina López ◽  
Álvaro Alberto López-Lambraño

Seasonal Auto Regressive Integrative Moving Average models (SARIMA) were developed for monthly rainfall time series. Normality of the rainfall time series was achieved by using the Box Cox transformation. The best SARIMA models were selected based on their autocorrelation function (ACF), partial autocorrelation function (PACF), and the minimum values of the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC). The result of the Ljung–Box statistical test shows the randomness and homogeneity of each model residuals. The performance and validation of the SARIMA models were evaluated based on various statistical measures, among these, the Student’s t-test. It is possible to obtain synthetic records that preserve the statistical characteristics of the historical record through the SARIMA models. Finally, the results obtained can be applied to various hydrological and water resources management studies. This will certainly assist policy and decision-makers to establish strategies, priorities, and the proper use of water resources in the Sinú river watershed.


1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 199-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Y. Liang ◽  
D. A. Dornfeld

This paper discusses the monitoring of cutting tool wear based on time series analysis of acoustic emission signals. In cutting operations, acoustic emission provides useful information concerning the tool wear condition because of the fundamental differences between its source mechanisms in the rubbing friction on the wear land and the dislocation action in the shear zones. In this study, a signal processing scheme is developed which uses an autoregressive time-series to model the acoustic emission generated during cutting. The modeling scheme is implemented with a stochastic gradient algorithm to update the model parameters adoptively and is thus a suitable candidate for in-process sensing applications. This technique encodes the acoustic emission signal features into a time varying model parameter vector. Experiments indicate that the parameter vector ignores the change of cutting parameters, but shows a strong sensitivity to the progress of cutting tool wear. This result suggests that tool wear detection can be achieved by monitoring the evolution of the model parameter vector during machining processes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arun Ramanathan ◽  
Pierre-Antoine Versini ◽  
Daniel Schertzer ◽  
Ioulia Tchiguirinskaia ◽  
Remi Perrin ◽  
...  

<p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>Hydrological applications such as flood design usually deal with and are driven by region-specific reference rainfall regulations, generally expressed as Intensity-Duration-Frequency (IDF) values. The meteorological module of hydro-meteorological models used in such applications should therefore be capable of simulating these reference rainfall scenarios. The multifractal cascade framework, since it incorporates physically realistic properties of rainfall processes such as non-homogeneity (intermittency), scale invariance, and extremal statistics, seems to be an appropriate choice for this purpose. Here we suggest a rather simple discrete-in-scale multifractal cascade based approach. Hourly rainfall time-series datasets (with lengths ranging from around 28 to 35 years) over six cities (Paris, Marseille, Strasbourg, Nantes, Lyon, and Lille) in France that are characterized by different climates and a six-minute rainfall time series dataset (with a length of around 15  years) over Paris were analyzed via spectral analysis and Trace Moment analysis to understand the scaling range over which the universal multifractal theory can be considered valid. Then the Double Trace Moment analysis was performed to estimate the universal multifractal parameters α,C<sub>1</sub> that are required by the multifractal cascade model for simulating rainfall. A renormalization technique that estimates suitable renormalization constants based on the IDF values of reference rainfall is used to simulate the reference rainfall scenarios. Although only purely temporal simulations are considered here, this approach could possibly be generalized to higher spatial dimensions as well.</p><p><strong>Keywords</strong></p><p>Multifractals, Non-linear geophysical systems, Cascade dynamics, Scaling, Hydrology, Stochastic rainfall simulations.</p>


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Gisela Vanegas ◽  
John Nejedlik ◽  
Pascale Neff ◽  
Torsten Clemens

Summary Forecasting production from hydrocarbon fields is challenging because of the large number of uncertain model parameters and the multitude of observed data that are measured. The large number of model parameters leads to uncertainty in the production forecast from hydrocarbon fields. Changing operating conditions [e.g., implementation of improved oil recovery or enhanced oil recovery (EOR)] results in model parameters becoming sensitive in the forecast that were not sensitive during the production history. Hence, simulation approaches need to be able to address uncertainty in model parameters as well as conditioning numerical models to a multitude of different observed data. Sampling from distributions of various geological and dynamic parameters allows for the generation of an ensemble of numerical models that could be falsified using principal-component analysis (PCA) for different observed data. If the numerical models are not falsified, machine-learning (ML) approaches can be used to generate a large set of parameter combinations that can be conditioned to the different observed data. The data conditioning is followed by a final step ensuring that parameter interactions are covered. The methodology was applied to a sandstone oil reservoir with more than 70 years of production history containing dozens of wells. The resulting ensemble of numerical models is conditioned to all observed data. Furthermore, the resulting posterior-model parameter distributions are only modified from the prior-model parameter distributions if the observed data are informative for the model parameters. Hence, changes in operating conditions can be forecast under uncertainty, which is essential if nonsensitive parameters in the history are sensitive in the forecast.


Water ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davide De Luca ◽  
Luciano Galasso

This study tests stationary and non-stationary approaches for modelling data series of hydro-meteorological variables. Specifically, the authors considered annual maximum rainfall accumulations observed in the Calabria region (southern Italy), and attention was focused on time series characterized by heavy rainfall events which occurred from 1 January 2000 in the study area. This choice is justified by the need to check if the recent rainfall events in the new century can be considered as very different or not from the events occurred in the past. In detail, the whole data set of each considered time series (characterized by a sample size N > 40 data) was analyzed, in order to compare recent and past rainfall accumulations, which occurred in a specific site. All the proposed models were based on the Two-Component Extreme Value (TCEV) probability distribution, which is frequently applied for annual maximum time series in Calabria. The authors discussed the possible sources of uncertainty related to each framework and remarked on the crucial role played by ergodicity. In fact, if the process is assumed to be non-stationary, then ergodicity cannot hold, and thus possible trends should be derived from external sources, different from the time series of interest: in this work, Regional Climate Models’ (RCMs) outputs were considered in order to assess possible trends of TCEV parameters. From the obtained results, it does not seem essential to adopt non-stationary models, as significant trends do not appear from the observed data, due to a relevant number of heavy events which also occurred in the central part of the last century.


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